The ongoing cycles of assessments, reports and guidance in regards to
systematic observation under the UNFCCC*

Long-term, sustainable systematic observation of the Earth's climate is the foundation for our
understanding of climate change and its associated impacts, and helps scientists
determine future trends. Information from Earth observation provides the fundamental basis upon which
the Convention was founded, the Paris Agreement was adopted, and decision-making at all levels on climate
change mitigation and adaptation depend.

SBSTA plays a central role in implementing systematic observation under the UNFCCC, liaising with important
partner programmes, including the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO), the Global Climate Observing
System (GCOS), the Committee on Earth Observation Satellites (CEOS) and other organizations.

The WMO and its member states operate the global
observing system (GOS). A subset of this is used by the GCOS for climate observations. The GOS
comprises observing facilities on land, at sea, in the air and in outer space. These facilities are
owned and operated by the Member countries of WMO each of which undertakes to meet certain responsibilities
in the agreed global scheme so that all countries can benefit from the consolidated efforts.

The figure above shows the cycles of assessment and identification of requirements for
systematic observation under the Convention: IPCC assessment reports, composed of the full scientific and
technical assessment of climate change and advancement in possible solutions to address climate change,
link into the GCOS assessment cycles of the climate observing system, and GCOS implementation plans and
status reports (particularly describing actions and updates in regards to the Essential Climate
Variables (ECVs)), all of which are supported by decisions and conclusions from the COP, SBI
and SBSTA . CEOS contributes to the GCOS implementation plans and provides reports to SBSTA on
progress made by space agencies.

In the first cycle, which followed the IPCC Second Assessment Report (SAR 1995), COP asked SBSTA in
1997, in consultation with the IPCC, to provide an adequacy report on the global observing system on
climate. This was prepared and delivered by GCOS in 1998;

In the second cycle, following the IPCC third assessment report (TAR 2001), GCOS provided its second
adequacy report in 2003, at which time COP asked GCOS to provide an implementation plan that identified the
actions needed to remedy the reported deficiencies in the climate observing systems (IP 2004).

In the third cycle, following the IPCC fourth assessment report (AR4 2007), the CEOS response to IP
2004, leading to the Satellite Supplement 2006, and the GCOS progress report to SBSTA 31 (2009) prepared
the way for the update of the GCOS Implementation Plan in 2010 (IP 2010) and its Satellite Supplement in
2011;

We are now in the forth cycle of this process, with the IPCC fifth assessment report (AR5) being
finalised in 2014, GCOS submitted the GCOS SR 2015 to COP 21, which incorporates updates and reviews from
CEOS and a large range of other contributors, and fed into the new GCOS IP 2016 (
gcos-200 (5441 kB) ).

At COP 11, by decision 11/CP.13 (page 45)
on Reporting on global observing systems for climate, the COP adopted revised UNFCCC
reporting guidelines on global climate change observing systems and decided that these guidelines
be used for the preparation of detailed technical reports on systematic observation in accordance with the
provisions of decisions 4/CP.5 and 5/CP.5. Annex I Parties provide these reports as part of their
national communications.

At SBSTA 33, the SBSTA encouraged Parties when preparing their national communications to take
into consideration the new requirements identified in the 2010 updated GCOS implementation plan, in
particular the new essential climate variables (ECVs). The SBSTA noted that any future revision of
relevant UNFCCC reporting guidelines, in particular those on global climate change observing systems,
should take into account the new elements identified in that plan (see FCCC/SBSTA/2010/13
paragraph 44).